Staff Profile

Career Summary

Biography

Jamie has over ten years experience in academia, and professional education at University level in Australia and a further eight years in a developing country. His approach to research and teaching is based on innovation, critical thinking, problem analysis providing viable, sustainable and creative solutions and student centred learning. He has been received an award for his doctoral research, achieved international recognition with invitations to referee on journals and participate on editorial advisory boards and established a reputation within the discipline with membership on State Government advisory committee. He has recently taken on a leadership role as Head of Discipline.

In academia in Australia and abroad Jamie has been associated with teaching and curriculum development for Architects, Construction Managers and Quantity Surveyors. In a number of roles he has been involved with leading edge educational programs in Architecture and Construction Management using Problem Based Learning.

Architectural consultancy and project supervision experience covers an extensive range of work in Australia and overseas focusing on the design, documentation, refurbishment and site supervision of a range of buildings from individual houses to International resort complexes, shopping centres, market complexes, residential complexes, industrial and commercial buildings. Jamie has worked and studied for a number years in Sri Lanka and Singapore. He has been involved in architectural consultancy in Sri Lanka that makes him familiar with tropical and sub-tropical climatic conditions and appropriate architectural responses.

A recent major project in which Jamie was involved was a Tsunami project in Sri Lanka. This was a large hospital building designed, documented and tendered within a very short time frame of two months to meet the demands of post-tsunami rebuilding. The University of Newcastle sponsored Jamie to work in Sri Lanka on this project.

Finally in 2009 Jamie was appointed as Head of Discipline for Construction Management. In this period he has managed and obtained new accreditation from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (UK). He has also developed a unique online portal for managing continual accreditations and been proactive in addressing problems with in the program, such as a lack of tutorial staff and managing curriculum changes in response to external examiners comments.

Qualifications

PhD, University of Newcastle, 22/01/2008

Post Graduate Diploma in Arch Conserv of Mon&Sites, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka

Bachelor of Design Studies, University of Queensland

Bachelor of Architecture (Honours), University of Queensland

Master of Science (Building), National University of Singapore

Research

Research keywords

Asian Cultures and Philosophy

Disaster Management

Environmental Management

Heritage Conservation Theory

Resilience

Research expertise

Jamie MacKee is a Senior Lecturer in Construction Management and his main areas of research are Architectural Conservation of the Cultural Built Heritage of Asia, Environmental management systems and construction management education. He has published numerous refereed Journal and Conference papers relating to these areas, especially environmental management systems. His work in Strategic Environmental Assessment has been widely disseminated to stakeholders in the Asian region. He has completed a Research Masters Degree at the National University of Singapore that focused on the community impact evaluation of cultural built heritage in Singapore. He is currently a Chief Investigator on an ECR Project that is investigating the impact of global agencies such as UNESCO on the conservation of Cultural Built Heritage in Asia. Jamie has been involved in Tsunami relief designing and tendering a AUD$1million hospital facility and Community Maternity Clinic in Sri Lanka. He is a reviewer for several international Journals including Building Research and Information and Construction Management and Economics.

Languages

Sinhalese

Fields of Research

Code

Description

Percentage

120102

Architectural Heritage And Conservation

40

120299

Building Not Elsewhere Classified

35

040604

Natural Hazards

25

Memberships

Body relevant to professional practice.

Member - Australian Institute of Building

Editorial Board.

Member - International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment

Awards

Research Award.

2010

Best Paper AwardCommonwealth Association of Surveying and Land Economy (Sri Lanka)Best Paper award. This was for a paper presented at the International Research Conference on Sustainability int he Built Environment, in Sri Lanka.

2008

Excellent Building PostgraduateChartered Institute of Building (United Kingdom)This award was given to my PhD thesis.

Collaboration

1. Conservation of the Cultural Built Heritage in Asia: In particular the use of Systems theory as the foundation of an Asian approach to conservation.

2. Disaster Management: Focusing on resilience of the built environment in the wake of disasters. Impacts of Disasters on built heritage, developing resilience in built heritage in the wake of a disaster.

Administrative

Administrative expertise

In 2008 I was invited to become Student Academic Conduct Officer (SACO) for the School of Architecture and the Built Environment. This appointment continued until I took over as Head of Discipline: Building. During this time I implemented a standardised approach to the processes for reporting and prosecuting academic misconduct throughout the School. To support this I introduced a series of basic proformas that made the process more transparent and streamlined. This resulted in a quicker turn-around in cases. I also processed 19 cases of suspected academic misconduct, 17 of which were upheld. I also participated in various events, sharing experiences and offering observations/advice to other SACOs.

In 2009 I was invited to be acting Head of Discipline, Building while the Head of Discipline was on SSP. This became permanent in 2010 due management restructuring in the School. As Head of the largest Discipline in the Faculty I have initiated and implemented a number of very significant activities and reforms. The first major activity was to design, develop and implement an online portal for managing the accreditation by professional bodies. This is a site that operates through Blackboard and becomes a repository/database for all the material that was previously put together every three or five years in paper form. This new site has the advantage of allowing external examiners and visiting panels to examine our programme and associated material prior to a visit which then makes the visits quite focused and streamlined.

The next major activity that I undertook personally was to plan, organise and lead the disciplines first accreditation from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (UK) (RICS) with and outstanding outcome. The RICS is a major global professional institution with over 200,000 members worldwide. This was done in parallel to the development of the online accreditation portal discussed above. The online portal was a key component of the successful accreditation by the RICS. The management of this accreditation is ongoing as the RICS assess our course annually due to their interests in partnerships with the accredited institution. I must also manage this partnership.

Currently I am leading another new accreditation with the Australian Institute of Building Surveyors (AIBS). There is a national shortage of Building Surveyors this accreditation is addressing a national need. As part of this new accreditation I am developing and managing a number of significant reforms. These include major amendments to improve the program and three new courses that will make the Construction Management program at Newcastle unique in Australia and align with AIBS requirements.

During my first weeks as acting as Head of Discipline I acted quickly to address a need for teaching support due to our increase in numbers. I advertised for expressions of interest in tutoring and with the satisfactory response created an online register of tutorial staff that is managed through Blackboard. All staff accesses this portal when searching for teaching support staff.

Since my appointment as Head of Discipline I have strengthened ties with our Industry Advisory Panel (IAP), introduced measures for greater engagement, and initiated a number of reforms that include review of membership and invitation to senior industry personal, two have accepted. Due to my efforts the IAP have had a direct involvement in providing advice on the current amendments to the programme for accreditation as discussed above.

2009- Head of Discipline (Building)

2008-09 Student Academic Conduct Officer

2005-07 University's Blackboard User Group

2003 School Postgraduate Director (Responsible for Building Discipline)

Teaching

Teaching keywords

Disaster Management Theory

Evaluation for Sustainability

Heritage

Heritage Conservation

Sustainability

Teaching expertise

TEACHING AND RELATED ACTIVITIES

I have been a Course Coordinator for 8 courses in the Bachelor of Construction Management (Building) degree programme. Three of these courses were introduced in 2006 as part of the program restructure, and I was therefore responsible for their design, development and continuing management/co-ordination. I have also been responsible for the initiation, design and development of a further three courses intended for a 2011 start as part of the current amendment to our program for accreditation purposes. I have been responsible for a number of sustained and effective innovations that have supported the development of our online delivery harnessing the Internet and Web2.0 technologies (refer to section 1.3 below).

As an undergraduate research supervisor I have supervised approximately 45 Honours undergraduates, with 15 achieving Hons 1 and 12 Hons 2a. At the time of writing this application I am supervising/co-supervising 12 honours students, two PhD students, one masters student, another masters ready to commence and one Masters completion.

I have consistently applied scholarly principles and practices to both the development and delivery of my teaching, basing it upon sound pedagogical research and subjecting it to scrutiny in various forums. This has resulted in a series of peer-reviewed papers in 1 journal, 2 conferences and one book chapter since my last promotion and discussed in the Research section of this promotion application.

Convening and Coordination of Courses

I am responsible for the co-ordination of three courses across three years, first year, third year and fourth year. These are three disparate courses two of which are delivered to a mixed cohort of Construction Management and Architectural students.

In my role as course co-ordinator I have predominantly been involved in the design and the redesign of individual courses, though all three of the courses that I currently teach arose out of the restructure of the Bachelor of Construction Management (Building) degree programme, in which I participated. These courses have evolved since their commencement in 2006. I have spent time considering the curricula and appropriate material. For example in ARBE2101 Construction Ecology 2 the original brief was to deal with sustainability issues. The challenge was to find an approach that satisfied two different types of students each with diverse objectives. The final solution was to work to my strengths in evaluation and cultural heritage. The resultant course focuses on decision making for sustainable outcomes in the built environment including the conservation of cultural built heritage. The course deals with evaluation and assessment methodologies with a focus on the application of the Green Building Councils Greenstar Rating system on the advice of members of our Industry Advisory Panel.

In my courses there are significant numbers of distance learners. To support and mentor their progress I have pioneered the use of online tutors. This has been successful in my first year course where I have engaged a graduate of our program who works for a construction company in Newcastle. This person was responsible for monitoring and supporting the online groups for their oral presentations and group report. He developed a good relationship with the students. Being a former distance learner and working in industry he quickly gained the respect of our predominately working distance students.

Planning and Development of Courses/programs

In my role as Head of Discipline I am currently leading/managing, designing and developing a major amendment/redesign of the Bachelor of Construction Management program to align with new accreditation priorities. As part of this process I have directly designed and developed three new courses and lead the amendments to a further ten courses.

This is a chapter in an edited book published by a leading publisher in my field, Routledge of Oxford, UK. This chapter is based on my PhD work that won a research award from the Chartered Institute of Building, UK.

This paper represents the shift toward a new research area of Disaster Management and published in an ERA2010 'A' rated journal.

2010

Mackee J, 'Sustaining cultural built heritage in the Asian Region through resilience', Conference Proceeding: International Research Conference on Sustainability in Built Environment, Colombo, Sri Lanka (2010) [E1]

This paper was awarded best paper at the International Research Conference on Sustainability in Built Environment and marks a shift in emphasis toward the concept of Resilience in CBH conservation.

2009

Mackee J, Conserving Cultural Built Heritage in South and Southeast Asia: A Conceptual Framework for the Conservation of Non-Secular Built Heritage Based on the Philosophical and Cultural Experiences of the Region, VDM Verlag, Saarbrucken, 262 (2009) [A1]

This book is taken from my doctoral and represents a new development in the theory of the conservation and protection of cultural built heritage in the Asian region.

2009

Mackee J, Evaluation in Urban Conservation: Case Studies on the Application of Evaluation in Conservation Decision-Making for the Inclusion of Cultural Built Heritage in Modern Urban Centres, VDM Verlag, Saarbrucken, 169 (2009) [A1]

This is my first book and is taken from my Masters work looking at the economic viability of conservation developments in Urban Centres.

Publications

For publications that are currently unpublished or in-press, details are shown in italics.

Click on a category title below to expand the list of citations for that specific category.

Book (2 outputs)

Year

Citation

Altmetrics

Link

2009

Mackee J, Conserving Cultural Built Heritage in South and Southeast Asia: A Conceptual Framework for the Conservation of Non-Secular Built Heritage Based on the Philosophical and Cultural Experiences of the Region, VDM Verlag, Saarbrucken, 262 (2009) [A1]

This book is taken from my doctoral and represents a new development in the theory of the conservation and protection of cultural built heritage in the Asian region.

2009

Mackee J, Evaluation in Urban Conservation: Case Studies on the Application of Evaluation in Conservation Decision-Making for the Inclusion of Cultural Built Heritage in Modern Urban Centres, VDM Verlag, Saarbrucken, 169 (2009) [A1]

This is my first book and is taken from my Masters work looking at the economic viability of conservation developments in Urban Centres.

This is a chapter in an edited book published by a leading publisher in my field, Routledge of Oxford, UK. This chapter is based on my PhD work that won a research award from the Chartered Institute of Building, UK.

Mackee J, 'A buddhist-systems paradigm for conserving cultural built heritage: Development of a conceptual framework for conserving non-secular monuments in South and Southeast Asia', The ICFAI University Journal of Architecture, 1 16-35 (2009) [C1]

MacKee J, 'Reconceptualising cultural heritage: the adaptive cycle as a means of rebranding the risk and vulnerabilities of cultural built heritage in the face of natural disasters.', International Conference on Building Resilience 2013, Ahungalla, Sri Lanka (2013) [E1]

Mackee J, 'Reconceptualising the management of urban regeneration in the Asian region through resilience', COBRA 2011. Proceedings of Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors Construction and Property Conference, University of Salford, UK (2011) [E1]

Mackee J, 'Sustaining cultural built heritage in the Asian Region through resilience', Conference Proceeding: International Research Conference on Sustainability in Built Environment, Colombo, Sri Lanka (2010) [E1]

This paper was awarded best paper at the International Research Conference on Sustainability in Built Environment and marks a shift in emphasis toward the concept of Resilience in CBH conservation.

Mackee J, Hartig KV, 'Foundations for an 'Asian' Approach to Conservation of the Cultural Built Heritage in Asia: A Study of the Cultural and Philosophical Traditions of the Sub-Continent, South and South East Asia', Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities 2007 Conference Proceedings, Honolulu, Hawaii (2007) [E1]

2007

Mackee J, 'An 'Asian' approach to the conservation of non-secular heritage in South and Southeast Asia: The development of a conceptual framework', Asia-Pacific Modernities: History, Theory and Criticism. National PHD Colloquium, Melbourne (2007) [E2]

2007

Mackee J, 'Restoring non-secular cultural heritage in South and Southeast Asia in the aftermath of a natural disaster: Integrating system theory and indigenous philosophical and cultural traditions to support sustainable conservation approaches', ICOMOS 2007 Conference Papers, Townsville, QLD (2007) [E2]

2006

Mackee J, Hartig KV, 'The Limitations of Western Based Conservation Theory and Policies for Conserving the Cultural Built Heritage in the Sub-Continent, South and South East Asia: A Review of Theory and Philosophical Approaches', 12th IPHS: International Planning History Society Conference Cross National Transfer of Planning Ideas and Local Identity - Book of Abstracts, New Delhi, India (2006) [E3]

MacKee J, Briffett C, 'Using Community Impact Evaluation to Support Continuing Conservation in Singapore.', Proceedings of The Second International Conference on Quality of Life in Cities, Singapore (2000)

2000

MacKee J, Briffett C, 'Evaluating The Sustainability Of The Cultural Built Heritage In The Asian Context: a review and introduction to a study of conservation in Singapore.', Cities and Sustainability: sustaining our cultural heritage, Kandalama, Sri Lanka (2000)

Report (6 outputs)

Year

Citation

Altmetrics

Link

2001

Briffett C, Obbard J, MacKee J, 'Final Report for the E.A.R.T.H Project, The Potential for Strategic Environmental Assessment in Asia', School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, 61 (2001)

2001

Briffett C, MacKee J, Obbard J, 'Philippines Country Report for the E.A.R.T.H Project, The Potential for Strategic Environmental Assessment in Asia', School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, 51 (2001)

2001

Briffett C, MacKee J, Obbard J, 'Singapore Country Report for the E.A.R.T.H Project, The Potential for Strategic Environmental Assessment in Asia', School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, 51 (2001)

2001

Briffett C, MacKee J, Obbard J, 'Philippines Country Report for the E.A.R.T.H Project, The Potential for Strategic Environmental Assessment in Asia', School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, 51 (2001)

2001

Briffett C, Obbard J, MacKee J, 'Malaysian Country Report for the E.A.R.T.H Project, The Potential for Strategic Environmental Assessment in Asia', School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, 51 (2001)

2001

MacKee J, Briffett C, Obbard J, 'Sri Lanka Country Report for the E.A.R.T.H Project, The Potential for Strategic Environmental Assessment in Asia', School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, 46 (2001)

Thesis / Dissertation (2 outputs)

Year

Citation

Altmetrics

Link

2008

MacKee J, A Conceptual Framework for the Conservation of Non-Secular Built Heritage in South and Southeast Asia: An alternative paradigm based on the philosophical and cultural experiences of the region., University of Newcastle (2008)

2000

MacKee J, A Community Impact Evaluation of Conservation Areas in Singapore., National University of Singapore (2000)

Asia Outbound Short Term Mobility Grant$21,500Funding Body: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade

Scheme

Role

Asia Outbound Short Term Mobility Grant

Chief Investigator

Total Amount

Funding Start

Funding Finish

$21,500

2014

2016

GNo:186139932

Asia Outbound Short Term Mobility Grant$21,500Funding Body: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade

Scheme

Role

Asia Outbound Short Term Mobility Grant

Investigator

Total Amount

Funding Start

Funding Finish

$21,500

2014

2016

GNo:186139944

Our past in the Future: Measuring and Mapping the impacts of climate change on the historic built environment of Newcastle
$13,588Funding Body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Engineering & Built Environment